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Selected Technology Transfer Issues in a Comparative Context
Pages 29-34

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From page 29...
... • The scale of federal government procurement combined with explicit pref erences or set-asides for small and medium-sized vendors and suppliers. • A history of regulatory and public policy commitments conducive to high tech start-up companies, including the competition-oriented or technol ogy-diffusion-oriented enforcement of intellectual property rights and an titrust law (competition policy)
From page 30...
... R&D and technology transfer infrastructure serving SMEs in these industries is relatively piecemeal, fragmented, and weak. German SMEs in technologically mature industries are served by highly networked, publicly funded R&D institutions and industry-organized R&D consortia that are heavily oriented toward the incremental product and process R&D needs of a national industrial base dominated by technologically mature industries.
From page 31...
... . Similarly, the technology transfer infrastructure supporting U.S.
From page 32...
... . Intellectual Property Rights and Technology Transfer to Industry A wide range of government laws and policies shape the dynamic of technology transfer in Germany and the United States.
From page 33...
... The contradictory requirements also apply to Helmholtz Centers, Blue List institutes, and departmental research institutes.43 These restrictive policies regarding the transfer of intellectual property rights are obviously not consistent with the explicit focus of many public R&D programs on industrial technology and technology transfer. An important advantage of the U.S.
From page 34...
... . International R&D Collaboration and Technology Transfer Comparative analysis of the technology transfer systems of the United States and Germany has underscored the potential for mutually beneficial transnational collaboration in various areas of R&D and technology transfer.


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